Wie wird man Psychotherapeut?
Hallo!
Ich möchte wahrscheinlich Psychotherapeut werden, jedoch ist mir irgendwie nicht klar, wie man das wird. Seit der Reform vor 3-4 Jahren gibt es im Internet auch keine Klarheit und auch Absolventen und co sind sich nicht einig. Ich habe jetzt 3 Wege mitgeteilt bekommen. 1 – von einer Absolventin; 2 – von einer Studienberatung; 3 – von einem Studierenden.
Welcher ist richtig? Oder ist es keiner? Gehen mehrerer? Welcher ist der beste?
- 3 Jahre Bachelor in Psychologie, 2 Jahre Master in Psychologie, 3-7 Jahre Therapeutische Ausbildung
- 3 Jahre Bachelor in Psychologie, 2 Jahre Master in Psychotherapie, 2-3 Jahre therapeutische Ausbildung
- 3 Jahre Bachelor in Psychotherapie, 2 Jahre Master in Psychotherapie, 3-5 Jahre therapeutische Ausbildung
Ich hoffe, ihr könnt mir helfen und verschafft Klarheit. Danke
3) is correct. Choosing the old system (Bachelor and Master Psychology, plus PT training) doesn’t make much sense, as this is still possible in time, so to make training (I don’t know the exact year, but I think that goes only up to about 2033). The path today is 1) psychotherapy (Bachelor + Master) and then 2) additional training to reach the subject in a policy psychotherapy. This is what you need to be able to settle through health insurance.
Yes, and this will take 5 years.
Okay! Thank you. Then what about the second way? Is that too?
But if you’re studying psychotherapy, you can’t go into research or consulting, can you?
It goes until 2032, in exceptional cases until 2035. However, you can only choose this path if you have started a psychology study at the latest on 31.08.2020.
Since the reform…
I correct: after the master, you still have to make the state approval examination to get an approval. You don’t get it automatically with the master.
Now it’s confusing. So you say, path 2 is the right one, the other responder says, 3 is correct…
is 3 true or is this total bullshit? This is all a bit confusing 😂
The other respondent said that way 2 is the ‘old way’. That’s not true. The ‘old way’, so by 2020, was as follows:
-Bachelor in Psychology at a University or University of Applied Sciences
-Master in Psychology at a University or University of Applied Sciences with at least one clinical module
-3-5 years of therapist training
The master in psychotherapy, who then closes directly with approbation as a psychological psychotherapist, did not exist before the reform. You always had to do the training after the Master, even if you had completed a Master with a clinical focus.
I don’t know a Bachelor in Psychotherapy. In any case, there is a normal psychology Bachelor and if the polyvalent and approbation conforms, then you are qualified for every master within psychology and psychotherapy. Whether there is a pure psychotherapy Bachelor, I don’t know–if yes, then there are probably many professions in psychology going away and you’re only limited to the clinical area or can only do the psychotherapy Master.
The psychotherapy master is called KLIPP (clinical psychology and psychotherapy).
What I think is:
Here is an overview of your question from the psychological professional associations.
https://www.bdp-verband.de/profession/studies/training-in-psychotherapie/das-psychthg
Is it? The University of Mainz already focuses on clinical research in the Bachelor. However, if it is polyvalent, you can also refer to legal psychology, work psychology, etc.
https://www.psychologie.uni-mainz.de/studiegaenge/bachelor/
Maybe a clinical bachelor was planning, but I don’t know about it.
Me neither. Think this misunderstanding came up because there was a direct study in psychotherapy. This applies only to the master and some might think the new Bachelor in Psychology is now called psychotherapy.
I’ve heard a lot of people talking about a psychotherapy bachelor. In my knowledge, there is no course of study and I find nothing on the Internet.
Thank you for the clarification. There should also be a Bachelor of Psychotherapy, but there is hardly anything on the Internet about it. Somehow are all confused Haha
Thank you.